Of particular interest was former National Labor Relations Board member John Raudabaugh (we’ve referenced his work before), who laid into Big Labor’s spurious arguments. We’re trying to track down his written statement to post here later.

He asserted that the board as early as 1939 recognized the superiority of secret-ballot elections over the “public signing” of union cards. He also pointed out that under federal law union officers must be elected by secret ballot.

“Unions have been trying to prevent employees from hearing the rest of the story from 1935,” the year the NLRA was enacted, Raudabaugh said. He criticized union card-signing initiatives as “stealth” activities in which peer pressure is applied. The legislation, unlike an NLRB direction of an election, provides no notice to the employer of the organizing campaign and does not require that employees receive information on both the costs and benefits of union representation, Raudabaugh said. The board strives to conduct elections under laboratory conditions, but the bill is “a push for lavatory conditions,” he said.